The Daily Telegraph magazine - Mick Farren cover (28 September 1973)

The Daily Telegraph magazine - Mick Farren cover (28 September 1973)

£31.99

Good condition for age - yellowing to page edges

WHERE THE WORLD COMES TO COURT - The International Court at The Hague has the machinery and expertise for world government, but states have been reluctant to use it. Can the ideal ever become reality?Two and a half pages

BY PARACHUTE ACROSS PATAGONIA - Three men determined to explore a remote area of Patagonia set off, through storms and past volcanoes, across 150 miles of ice. Paul Savage tells their story. Photographs by Leo DickinsonFour and a half pages

PILLAR OF ARCHITECTURE - Anonymity, the common jibe cast at much modern architecture, cannot be applied to Sir Basil Spence, OM, ebullient and confident creator of so many major buildings. If any modern architect is known by name to the man in the street it is he. But in London streets such as Birdcage Walk and Knightsbridge the name is known with something less than admiration. What has happened to the reputation made with Coventry Cathedral?5 pages

IT, OZ AND ALL THE OTHERS - Was the Underground press a shortlived volcano? Many of its papers have folded, and many youthful idealists are now veterans of progress. Charles Nicholl asks if the whole business has gone into decline5 pages

TIGERS AT BAY - Before the war there were 40,000 tigers in India alone. By the end of this decade, without protection, they will be extinct. Miles Gibson reports on the Indian Government's desperate attempts to save the big catsTwo and a half pages

JIMMY GILLESPIE'S BARGAIN WITH GOD - A short story by Joan DraperTwo and three-quarter pages

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